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Pipeline Politics: Oil, gas and the US interest in Afghanistan (english)
by Richard Tanter 8:07am Fri Nov 23 '01 (Modified on 10:11am Fri Nov 23 '01)

What is this war really about anyway?

Pipeline Politics: Oil, gas and the US interest in Afghanistan

Richard Tanter


Oil and gas are not the reason the US has attacked Afghanistan, but Afghanistan has long had a key place in US plans to secure control of the vast but landlocked oil and gas reserves of Central Asia. Though the primary US motivation is to destroy Osama bin Laden’s sanctuary in Afghanistan, another, rather more pecuniary objective is also on the agenda, particularly in the search for an alternative government in Kabul. With the Taliban out of Kabul and the search for a new Afghan government on center stage, one criterion on Washington’s mind will be how best to make Afghanistan safe for a couple of billion-dollar pipeline investments.

In the case of the great natural gas and oil fields of Turkmenistan, immediately north of Afghanistan, the US government has for a decade strongly supported plans by US-led business groups for both an oil pipeline from Turkmenistan to the Arabian sea via Afghanistan and a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan. Such pipelines would serve important US interests in a number of ways:

* Drawing the Central Asian oil states away from the Russian sphere of influence and establishing the foundation for a strong US position

* thwarting the development of Iranian regional influence by limiting Turkmenistan-Iranian gas links and thwarting a plan for a Turkmenistan-Iran oil pipeline to the Arabian Sea.

* diversify US sources of oil and gas, and, by increasing production sources, help keep prices low l benefiting US oil and construction companies with growing interests in the region l providing a basis for much-needed economic prosperity in the region, which might provide a basis for political stability.

For much of the 1990s the United States supported the Taliban’s rise to power, both by encouraging the involvement of US oil companies, and by implicitly tolerating Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, two of its key regional allies, in their direct financial and military support for the Taliban. The Taliban, which is committed to a particularly primitive vision of Sunni Islam, had the added advantage for the US of being deeply hostile to Shia Muslims in neighboring Iran (as well as within Afghanistan).

A crucial condition for building the pipelines is political stability in Afghanistan, and for a time the US believed the Taliban could
provide just that. Had it not been for the Taliban’s apparent tolerance of the former US-supported Osama bin Laden, and the Taliban’s highly visible extremely repressive attitude to women and other social issues, the US would most likely have continued its support for the Taliban, and the construction of the pipelines would have got underway in the late 90s. Certainly Iran believed that the US was behind Pakistani and Saudi support for the Taliban as part of a long-term plan to contain Iran. But as so often before, US foreign policy based on the principle of “my enemy’s enemy is my friend” helped generate the conditions that allowed the New York and Washington atrocities to be conceived.

The key to Central Asian politics is economic development in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, all
of which are amongst the poorest parts of the former Soviet Union. Most are authoritarian dictatorships of the most dismal kind. For
the past ten years the US has been wooing the governments of these countries, and opening the doors for profitable investment by US companies.

Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan make up the eastern side of the Caspian Sea Basin, beneath which lie oil reserves to rival those of Saudi Arabia and the world’s richest reserves of natural gas. If you read the trade newspapers and websites of the world oil industry, words like “fabulous”, “huge”, “enormous” flow across the pages describing the Caspian Sea Basin gas and oil fields. But more importantly, these words go together with “undeveloped”, “isolated” and “politically unstable”. There are billions of dollars to be made there, but the possibility of realizing these fabulous profits hinges on one crucial issue: how is the gas and oil to get to its potential markets? While the countries of Central Asia may be floating on a sea of hydrocarbon, they are far from both actual seas and centres of industry. – and deep in the heart of Islam.

In the past the Caspian republics exported most of their oil and gas to a pipeline grid integrated into the rest of the Soviet Union/ Russia. But with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the terms of trade became very sharp. In the 1990s the ex-Soviet buyers of Caspian hydrocarbons could no longer afford to pay world prices. And Gazprom, the old Soviet oil company that owned the pipelines, was selling its own oil in competition with that of the Caspian republics. In 1997, Gazprom denied Turkmenistan access to its pipelines over a payment dispute, resulting in a devastating 25% drop in the Turkmenistan GDP. The ex-Soviet Russian pipeline network itself is past its use-by date, having been sloppily built with out-of-date technology, and itself needs billions of dollars simply to renovate it.

A small number of new pipelines have been built, but many more are, as they say, in the pipeline. But all have costs in the billions, and each of the possible routes from the Caspian Sea Basin – west, south, southeast and east – has very serious political difficulties. If Afghan political turmoil could be ended, there are literally billions of dollars to be made by US and Japanese companies, by the Turkmenistan, Afghan and Pakistani governments, and one key element of US planning for Central Asian regional hegemony would be achieved.

The Northern Route: from the Caspian through Russia

An existing Russian pipeline to the huge oil terminal on the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk could be linked to the new fields in Azerbaijan and later Kazakhstan. A plan for this “Northern Route” involving the Caspian Sea Pipeline Consortium of Russian and foreign corporations is pressing ahead, but faces several severe obstacles. The first is the war in Chechnya, through which the first phase of this pipeline passes. The second is that the US is opposed to it for precisely the reasons that Russia likes it: it would be good for Russia. The third is that Turkey is uneasy about increasing Russian oil and gas tanker traffic exiting the Black sea through the already over-crowded 17 mile-long Bosphorus/Turkish Straits which connect the Black Sea to the Mediterranean, and which now carry 1.7 million barrels/day of oil alone.

The Western Route (2): via Georgia to Turkey

In late September of this year, Azerbaijan and Georgia agreed on terms for passage rights across Georgia of a gas pipeline from Azerbaijan to Turkey to start exports in 2004. In total, the Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline will cost about $1 billion, but would open the way to Azerbaijani gas reaching either Turkish domestic markets or onward to Europe. This would fit with EU planning to create a gas grid stretching from the Caspian to the Atlantic. Georgia is still politically unstable, but more importantly, this route is not especially suitable for the states to the east of the Caspian Sea – Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. Anything
involving the Caspian Sea itself is regarded as extremely sensitive by oil companies because in the mess left by the break-up of the
Soviet Union, there is no accepted legal framework for governing the Caspian Sea itself. The US has been pressing hard for the
project to come on line quickly, both because it would begin the flow of serious investment funds, and because it would strengthen its current favourite for regional strongman, Turkey, against its former favourite, Iran.

The Eastern Route: China

Another possibility of considerable importance for East Asia and Japan would be a pipeline from Turkmenistan to Xinjiang in China, and then into the Chinese gas grid to the industrialized east coast – and possibly on to Japan. The problem however is the huge distance involved – more than 7,000 km. – and very rugged terrain in places. According to a study prepared jointly by Mitsubishi, Exxon and China National Petroleum, such a pipeline would cost more than $10 billion. There is also a small problem of providing a tempting and vulnerable target to separatist movements in China’s western provinces. China National Petroleum recently abandoned an agreement with Kazakhstan to construct an oil pipeline east because of disagreements about cost. However, China is seriously interested in Caspian Sea hydrocarbon resources, and has even reported an interest in a pipeline to the Arabian sea, with a view to importing gas and oil by supertanker.

The Southern Route: Iran

Turkmenistan shares a long border with Iran, and there is already a gas pipeline linking it to the northern region of Iran, where most of
Iran’s industry is located. Iran, of course, itself has very large gas and oil reserves, but these are located in the south of the country,
close to the Persian Gulf. An expansion of the Turkmenistan-Iran relationship could be beneficial to both states. More importantly, it
would provide another route to Turkey, and hence Europe, or to the Indian Ocean. However, the prosperity of Iran is not something
viewed with great favour in Washington. Nonsense about rogue states apart, Washington’s core concern about Iran is its role as the
natural dominant power in the Persian Gulf. When the Shah was in power, this was to be lauded; come the Iranian revolution, to be
abhorred. As French, Japanese, Italian, Chinese, Malaysian and Russian companies have moved back into a politically changing Iran, American oil and construction companies have long been nudging Washington to soften its stance toward Iran, and in particular to abandon the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996. But until Washington is sure it can control ensure the safety of its own oil interests in Saudi Arabia and other conservative Gulf states, there is little likelihood of Washington supporting a major Iranian pipeline for Caspian Sea Basin gas.

The Southeastern Route: Afghanistan to Pakistan

For gas exporters, cost rises with length of pipeline. The shortest and cheapest export route for Turkmenistan oil and for its vast gas
reserves is through Afghanistan, and serious planning for both oil and gas pipeline construction by US companies has long been in place. Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan agreed in 1997 to build a large Central Asian Gas pipeline through the less mountainous southern parts of Afghanistan to Pakistan, and then possibly on to the growing market of India. The Central Asian Gas Pipeline Consortium was made up of Unocal (US, 47% share), Delta Oil (Saudi Arabia, 15%), Government of Turkmenistan (7%), Itochu Oil Exploration (Japan, 6.5%), Indonesia Petroleum [INPEX] (Japan, 6.5%), Hyundai Engineering and Construction (5%), and the Crescent Group (Pakistan, 3.5%). Unocal was the lead developer, much encouraged by the US government. In December 1997, senior officials of the US Department of Energy meeting in Washington with Taliban ministers put their blessing on the enterprise.

The $1.9 billion Centgas pipeline is to be 120 cm. in diameter, and to run 1271 kilometers from the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan border, due south and then east, generally following the Herat – Kandahar road, then cross the Pakistan border at Quetta, terminating at Mulat. The Turkmenistan government has agreed to build a short pipeline to the huge Dauletabad gas field. 20 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year will flow down the pipeline, and the Turkmenistan government has guaranteed to deliver 708 billion cubic meters of gas to the consortium – equivalent to the entire reserves of the Dauletabad field.

Just how much the consortium stands to make depends on many factors, especially fluctuations in the price and demand for natural gas in the markets of East and Southeast Asia. But there are clearly huge profits to be made. And for Pakistan and Turkmenistan, as well as Afghanistan, the project would be immensely beneficial. For Afghanistan it would be the first major foreign investment since the Soviet invasion in 1979. For Pakistan it could be a key to the next stage of industrialization. Just how much the Centgas consortium agreed to pay the Taliban for transit rights is unknown. But Unocal’s competitor in the race to build an oil pipeline from Turkmenistan through western Afghanistan to the Arabian Sea coast of Pakistan -- the Argentinian company, Bridas -- was reported to have offered the Taliban $1 billion in transit fees, plus a considerable amount of railroad track, road construction, and a police post building every 20 km. along the pipeline to by garrisoned by Taliban troops.

The US government pressured Turkmenistan to give preference to the Unocal-led Centgas consortium over Bridas. In 1997 Centgas got the gas pipeline contract, but by the time it was ready to commence work, the political situation in Afghanistan that had looked promising to US eyes in the mid-1990s had deteriorated. Civil war continued, the Taliban’s cultural extremism and hostility to women had exploded in the world media, and Afghanistan had become a major terrorist base. In August 1998, the US attacked bin Laden’s Afghanistan camps, and four months later, Unocal pulled out of Centgas. The combination of instability, pressure from the US government and attacks from shareholders and women’s groups in the US was too much.

With Afghanistan at war with itself and the United States, the alluring Centgas project was on hold, despite repeated efforts to
re-start the consortium by the governments of Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan. With the profits to be made so enormous, Unocal was reported to be trying to edge back into the project last year. But in addition to its obvious problems in Afghanistan, Unocal is being sued in a US court for use of Burmese forced labour over its Thailand-Burma project. (If this case succeeds, it will be the first occasion in which a US court has held a US corporation legally responsible for foreign human rights violations related to its profit-making activities; Unocal could face many millions in damage awards.) And the United States government imposed economic sanctions on Myanmar, banning new investment, largely because of the domestic reaction to Unocal’s exploitation of Burmese forced labour organized by the Myanmar dictatorship.

Meanwhile Unocal remains the lead developer on the consortium to build a 105-cm diameter 1700 kilometer-long oil pipeline from northern Turkmenistan through Afghanistan to a Pakistani port on the Arabian Sea. A Unocal spokesman boasted to Congress that it would compare with the giant (and environmentally risky) Trans-Alaska Pipeline. Unocal – and Japanese - executives regard this $2.5 billion plan as by far the cheapest and least difficult way of bringing Turkmenistan’s oil to the sea, where it can be loaded onto supertankers bound for Japan and Korea, and possibly China..

Oil and gas are not the direct causes of the war in Afghanistan, but understanding the motives of long-term US policy towards that country is important. The pursuit of hydrocarbon interests has been a constant of US policy in the region for more than half a century. Having created the mujahadin resistance to fight the Soviets during the Cold War, the US then lost interest in the country, and allowed its former clients to destroy it. In order to gain the stability necessary for oil and gas operations, it flirted with the Taliban, until finally the whirlwind its earlier support for the mujahadin had created came blowing back home as a terrorist horror.

[There is a great map of all the Central Asian pipelines at the end of the following file:

US Dept of Energy, Caspian Sea Region Oil and Natural Gas Reserves http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/caspgrph.html#TAB2

Other useful links:

Trade and Environment Database: Turkmen Oil and Gas http://www.american.edu/projects/mandala/TED/turkmen.htm

Central Asia Newsnet http://www.centralasianews.net

US Dept of Energy, Afghanistan page http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/afghan.html

US Dept of Energy, Caspian Sea Region page http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/caspian.html

Michael Ratner home page, for information on the suit against Unocal over Burmese forced labour http://www.humanrightsnow.org

Institute of War and Peace reporting, Central Asia http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?centasia_index.html

MERIP: Middle East Research and Information Report.

www.zmag.org/ZNET.htm

add your own comments

Pipelines and War in Central Asia (english)
by Oread Daily 8:34am Fri Nov 23 '01

PIPELINES AND WAR

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia has kept Central
Asia's huge oil and gas reserves bottled up by restricting access to
export pipelines - all of which run over Russian territory. The
United States has been pushing alternative pipeline projects out of
the region that do not run over Russian soil, thus reducing Russia's
influence while increasing its own throughout Central Asia. Thus
some make the argument that the campaign in Afghanistan which
was "initiated" due to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, is also (or
really) about oil and may be described as "a late colonial
adventure." Afghanistan, they believe, is vital to the control and
transportation of oil in Central Asia. While Afghanistan has some
oil and gas of its own, it has not enough to qualify as a major
strategic concern. Its northern neighbors, by contrast, contain
reserves which could be critical to future global supply. In 1998,
Dick Cheney then chief executive of a major oil services company,
remarked: "I cannot think of a time when we have had a region emerge
as suddenly to become as strategically significant as the Caspian."
But the oil and gas there is worthless until it is moved. Growth in
European oil consumption is slow and competition is intense. In
south Asia, by contrast, demand is booming and competitors are
scarce. Pumping oil south and selling it in Pakistan and India, in
other words, may be more profitable than pumping it west and selling
it in Europe (even though there are those intent on doing just that-
see below), so such a route seems less of an enticement for western
capital. Transporting all the Caspian basin's fossil fuel through
Russia or Azerbaijan would greatly enhance Russia's political and
economic control over the central Asian republics, which is precisely
what the west has spent 10 years trying to prevent. Piping it through
Iran would enrich a regime which the US has been seeking to isolate.
Sending it the long way round through China, quite aside from the
strategic considerations, would be extremely expensive. Another
route which is receiving very serious attention heads through Turkey
to the Mediterranean. In fact, on 19 October 1999 BP-Amoco issued a
statement affirming that "the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline is a strategic
transportation route that should be built." BP-Amoco further
expressed a willingness to "provide a lead to ensure that companies
work with governments and multilateral financial institutions to find
a way to finance such a pipeline." The Turkish route is on the front
burner and is a definite option.

A pipelines through Afghanistan would allow the US both to pursue its
aim of "diversifying energy supply" and to penetrate the world's most
lucrative markets. In 1995 the US oil company Unocal started
negotiating to build oil and gas pipelines from Turkmenistan, through
Afghanistan and into Pakistani ports on the Arabian sea. The
company's scheme required a single administration in Afghanistan and
may be why Pakistan has been so supportive of the Taliban and why the
US for so long was satisfied with their rule. For the first years of
Taliban rule, US policy towards the regime appears to have been
determined principally by Unocal's (the primary force backing the
pipeline) interests. Only in December 1998, four months after the
embassy bombings in east Africa, did Unocal drop its plans (this also
followed feminist opposition related to the Taliban and green
opposition related to the environment). But Afghanistan's strategic
importance has not changed In September, a few days before the
attack on New York, the US energy information administration reported
that "Afghanistan's significance from an energy standpoint stems from
its geographical position as a potential transit route for oil and
natural gas exports from central Asia to the Arabian sea. This
potential includes the possible construction of oil and natural gas
export pipelines through Afghanistan".

In addition, US control in Afghanistan and the development of its on
pipeline would be a strategic blow to both Chinese and Russian
interests in Central Asia. Both countries working together have been
moving to strengthen economic, political and military ties with the
countries of the region. The US cannot happy about this from a geo-
political and economic perspective.
On the other hand, there are those who believe the military operation
in Afghanistan could lessen the chances of the pipeline going through
that country. Some believe it is possible that the US sanctions
against Iran could be lifted and, consequently, real opportunities
for the construction of an alternative oil pipeline via Iran.
Although in many ways that route makes the most sense, it seems a
pretty unlikely event. A route through Iran would simply be too much
of a strategic liability for American interests to seriously
consider. There is the argument that the terrorism threat in Central
Asia stands to squelch new capital investment and now that
Afghanistan has become the focus of American military plans, the
Caspian region may be more unstable than the Gulf. And there are
those who feel that war in Afghanistan may have brought an end to
America's ambitions in the area as a quid pro quo for Russia's co-
operation in the US-led campaign. In fact, Condoleeza Rice has
recently tried to present this argument to the Russians. She said in
an article in the Russian daily Izvestia: "I want to stress this: our
policy is not aimed against the interests of Russia. We do not
harbour any plans aimed at squeezing Russia out of there." But when
peace and a stable government eventually comes to Kabul, it is hard
to imagine that US oil companies will not be looking closely again at
Afghanistan because it offers the shortest, cheapest route for
Central Asia's vast quantities of untapped oil and gas. Some say
such a route would cost about half what the one proposed through
Turkey, for example, would run.

Russia, however, is not to be ignored and neither is China. Russia
has reserves of its own and has plans of its own. Speaking to the
heads of Russia's largest oil companies, Energy Minister Igor Yusufov
stated that the construction of a new pipeline from Siberia to China
will open a "new eastern export track" for Russian oil which, in a
decade, will be comparable in revenue to current Russian exports to
Europe. It is estimated that within ten years China's needs for oil
and gas will exceed that of all the rest of the Asian countries
combined. Russia hopes to corner at least half of the Chinese energy
market. Also, with the opening of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium's
line on Oct. 1, the first big one to be built since the fall of the
Soviet Union, and which was led by Chevron and brought together the
governments of Kazakhstan, Russia and Oman, as well as several other
oil companies, for financing, Russia's influence has grown
significantly and could make Russia more of an obstacle to the US
plans. Most of this 1,850-kilometre route runs across Russian
territory. (Some argue the other way and say a Russia bargaining from
strength might be more cooperative)

There are many minor players and other pipelines with competing or
corresponding interests.
In point of fact, just a few weeks ago, the Azerbaijan International
Operating Company (whose controller and leading shareholder is
BP/AMACO) took the decision to actually begin construction on the
pipeline which would lead through Turkey.

Turkmen President Saparmyrat Nyyazow has suggested pushing ahead with
plans for a trans-Afghan gas pipeline, put forward by Turkmenistan in
2000, as a means of giving an economic boost to Afghanistan and
assisting its people. In this context, Niyazov proposed to the UN to
consider the possibility of implementing the trans-Afghan gas
pipeline project as an effective means of regulating peaceful life in
Afghanistan (not to mention the benefits for Turkmenistan).

The Kazakh national company Oil and Gas Transport (TNG) and China
National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) recently signed an agreement on
the construction of the Kenkiyak-Atyrau oil pipeline in western
Kazakhstan. This pipeline would transport oil onwards through the
Atyrau-Samara pipeline or through the Caspian Pipeline Consortium
system (mentioned above), which will transport Kazakh oil through the
Russian port of Novorossiysk.

And there is Iran. Iran's military has warned of a confrontation with
the West over control of the Caspian Sea. Iran has been fighting to
maintain control over the Caspian energy reserves at all costs. The
warning comes as part of increasing Iranian concern that the current
U.S.-led military offensive against Afghanistan will end up resulting
in a long-term U.S. and British presence in Central Asia. Iran in
fact has worked with Russia on plans to develop a pipeline which
would take Caspian Sea oil to Europe.

As you can see the situation in Central Asia is quite complex and
can't help but remind one of the old days of imperial power
conflict. Had there been no Bin Laden, it is quite likely that US,
Pakistani, and Taliban interests all would have coincided in the
construction of a pipeline across Afghanistan to Pakistan. The US
would have looked the other way, just as it has been doing, at the
oppressive brutal nature of the Taliban regime, in the interest of
corporate profits. Now, who knows? Not me.

The Tacit Deal (english)
by Sam Noid 10:11am Fri Nov 23 '01

The United States of Chevron won't hassle Russia over their attack on Chechnya if they let us have Albania and Afganistan.

Like two criminal syndicates agreeing to divide turf.